Improving the cold flow properties of biodiesel from waste cooking oil by surfactants and detergent fractionation

2011 
Abstract The use of surfactants and detergent fractionation to improve the cold flow properties of biodiesel from waste cooking oil (BWCO) was investigated. The effect of five types of surfactants, including sugar esters (S270 and S1570), silicone oil (TSA 750S), polyglycerol ester (LOP-120DP) and diesel conditioner (DDA) on the reduction of the cold filter plugging point (CFPP) of the BWCO, was evaluated, with the greatest reduction to the CFPP of the BWCO (from −10 °C to −16 °C) being was achieved by the addition of 0.02 wt% of polyglycerol ester (LOP-120P). Detergent fractionation of the BWCO was performed by first mixing partially crystallized biodiesel with a chilled detergent (sodium dodecylsulfate) solution accompanied by an electrolyte (magnesium sulfate), and then separating the mixture by centrifugation to obtain the BWCO liquid. An orthogonal experimental design was utilized to investigate the effects of the various parameters on detergent fractionation. The optimal parameters, as obtained by range analysis, were as follows: detergent loading 0.3 wt%, electrolyte loading 1.0 wt%, and water loading 150 wt%. The CFFP of the liquid biodiesel from waste cooking oil (LBWCO) was −17 °C with a yield of 73.1% when the detergent fractionation was performed under these conditions. A limited number of biodiesel physical and chemical properties were analyzed before and after the addition of surfactants and detergent fractionation.
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